Agreement verified: Texas Rangers just reached a $92 million signing agreement.

Texas Rangers sign Jacob deGrom to five-year, $185 million deal in MLB free agency stunner

Jacob deGrom, the two-time Cy Young Award winner and one of baseball’s most dominant pitchers even as injuries limited his availability, cashed in on his pedigree by agreeing to a stunning five-year, $185 million contract with the Texas Rangers on Friday.

The right-hander’s signing, announced by the club, continues a stunning two-year run in which the floundering Rangers have laid out $741 million for free agents, including $500 million for middle infielders Corey Seager and Marcus Semien almost exactly one year ago.

Texas finished 68-94 despite that lavish outlay, fired manager Chris Woodward and hired three-time World Series-winning manager Bruce Bochy in hopes of producing the club’s first winning season since 2016.

Jacob deGrom signs five-year, $185million free agent deal with the Texas  Rangers

Those chances were considerably enhanced Friday – as was deGrom’s bank account.

DeGrom, who opted out of the final year of a five-year, $137.5 million extension he signed with the Mets in 2019, took advantage of both his rarefied status as a shutdown pitcher as well as a limited market for starters. He’ll turn 35 next season, and tossed just 64 innings in 2022 as a scapula injury delayed his first start until August.

Nonetheless, deGrom will be guaranteed $37 million per season, second only to former teammate Max Scherzer’s $43.3 million per annum on a three-year deal with the Mets. DeGrom also tops the $36 million that Yankees right-hander Gerrit Cole earns on a nine-year, $324 million contract signed after the 2019 season.

It all justifies deGrom confidently stating in spring training that he’d opt out of the final year on his contract with the Mets and he stuck to that, thanks largely to a track record of striking out 11 batters per nine innings over his career, and an untouchable stretch from 2018-19 that netted him consecutive National League Cy Young Awards.

Elbow inflammation limited him to 15 starts and 92 innings in 2021, and he did not pitch again after July 7. The unrelated scapula injury pushed his time between regular season starts to nearly 13 months.

But he is as dominant as ever: deGrom struck out a career-best 14.3 batters per nine innings in both 2021 and ’22, and posted a 0.63 WHIP over those 26 starts, although he gave up a career-high 1.5 home runs per nine innings in 11 outings last year.

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